Definition of radical equations with examples

Radicalequations (also known as irrational) are equations in which the unknown value appears under a radical sign.

The method for solving radical equation is raising both sides of the equation to the same power.

If we have the equation , then the condition of that equation is always , however, this is not a sufficient condition. Respecting the properties of the square root function (the domain of square root function is ), the second condition is . Therefore, we need to ensure that both sides of equation are non-negative.

After squaring we have an equivalent equation:

Condition is now unnecessary (it is automatically satisfied after squaring); the solutions of the equation will thus satisfy condition , so that for these solutions it will be .

Now we have:

and .

In general, this is valid for the square root of every even number :

and .

For the square root of every odd number it will be

,

because their domain is a whole set of real numbers.

Example 1. Solve the equation:

.

Solution:

Both sides of the equation are non-negative; we can square the equation:

.

We must now confirm if it is the correct solution:

.

It follows that is the solution of the given equation.

Example 2. Solve the equation:

.

Solution:

Conditions for this equation are and and .

It follows that must be in interval .

Both sides of the equation are always non-negative, therefore we can square the given equation.

.

We need check that is the solution of the initial equation:

.

It follows that is the solution of the initial equation. We can conclude that directly from the condition of the equation, without any further requirement to checking.

Example 3. Solve the equation:

.

Solution:

Now we must be sure that the right side of the equation is non-negative. Therefore is the condition of this equation.

After squaring the equation, we have:

.

The solutions for quadratic equation are:

and .

The only solution is due to satisfied condition .

Example 4. Solve the equation:

Solution:

Both sides of the equation are always non-negative, therefore we can square the equation. In this example we need to square the equation twice, as displayed below:

.

is not the solution of the initial equation, because , which is the condition of the equation (check it!).

Note: as we observed through the steps of solving of the equation, that this equation does not have solutions before the second squaring, because the square root cannot be negative.

Example 5. Solve the equation.

.

Solution:

Both sides of the equation are non-negative, therefore we can square the equation: